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ERT 108/3 : PHYSICAL CHEMISTRY Chemical Kinetics By; Mrs Hafiza Binti Shukor ERT 108/3 PHYSICAL CHEMISTRY SEM 2 (2010/2011) TOPIC COVERED…; Experimental Chemical and Kinetics Reactions First Order Reactions Second Order Reactions Reaction Rates and Reaction Mechanisms Light Spectroscopy and Adsorption Chemistry (Experimental methods for fast reactions). ERT 108/3 PHYSICAL CHEMISTRY SEM 2 (2010/2011) CHEMICAL KINETICS?? Also called reaction kinetics Study of the rates & mechanisms of chemical reactions 2 types of reaction; a)homogeneous – reaction occurs in 1 phase (gas @liquid phase) b)heterogeneous – reaction occurs in 2 @ > phase ERT 108/3 PHYSICAL CHEMISTRY SEM 2 (2010/2011) Experimental Chemical and Kinetics Reactions Rates of chemical Reactions: the rate of speed with which a reactant disappears or a product appears. the rate at which the concentration of one of the reactants decreases or of one of the products increases with time. mol L-1 s-1. ERT 108/3 PHYSICAL CHEMISTRY 4 SEM 2 (2010/2011) Example 1 • The decomposition of dinitrogen pentoxide (N2O5) in an inert solvent (carbon tetrachloride) at 450C: • The data of the formation of O2(g) and the disappearance of N2O5 is shown in Table 1. • The initial concentration [N2O5] = 1.40M. What is the concentration, [N2O5] at time, t=423s? ERT 108/3 PHYSICAL CHEMISTRY 5 SEM 2 (2010/2011) Rate of Reaction: A variable quantity • Rate of reaction is expressed as either: reac tan t Re action rate t [ Negative value ] Disappearance of reactant or product Re action rate t [ Positive value ] Formation of products ERT 108/3 PHYSICAL CHEMISTRY 6 SEM 2 (2010/2011) Answer (Example 1) • At t=0, Initial [N2O5] = 1.40M • At t = ∞, Final [N2O5] = 0M [decomposes completely] • 5.93cm3 O2(g) is obtained at STP. • After 423s, the volume of O2 (g) collected is 1.32cm3 of a possible 5.93cm3. • The fraction of the N2O5 decomposed is 1.32/5.93. • The decrease in concentration of N2O5 at this point = (1.32/5.93) x 1.40M = 0.312 M. • After 423s, [N2O5] remaining undecomposed = 1.40-0.31 = 1.09M. ERT 108/3 PHYSICAL CHEMISTRY 7 SEM 2 (2010/2011) Example 2: • From the figure , determine the rate of decomposition of N2O5 at 1900s. • What is the initial rate of reaction? Graphical determination of the rate of reaction of dinitrogen pentoxide in carbon tetrachloride 1.60 1.40 1.20 [N2O5], mol/L Note: the rate of reaction can be expressed as the slope of a tangent line. 1.00 0.80 0.60 0.40 0.20 0.00 0 200 400 600 800 1000 1200 1400 1600 1800 2000 2200 2400 Time, s ERT 108/3 PHYSICAL CHEMISTRY 8 SEM 2 (2010/2011) Answer (Example 2) • Based on the graph of concentration of reactant vs time, the slope of a tangent line at t=1900s, Re action rate slope of tan gent N 2O5 t 0.21mol / L 800 s 2.6 x10 4 mol L1 S 1 ERT 108/3 PHYSICAL CHEMISTRY 9 SEM 2 (2010/2011) • The initial rate = 1.24 1.40mol N 2O5 / L 200s = 8.0 x 10-4 mol N2O5 L-1 s-1 ERT 108/3 PHYSICAL CHEMISTRY10 SEM 2 (2010/2011) The Rate Law for Chemical Reactions • The rate law or rate equation – mathematical equation. aA bB ...... gG hH ...... Reaction rate, r = k[A]m[B]n ….. The rate, r at time t is experimentally found to be related to the concentrations of species present at that time, t . The exponents in the rate reaction are called the order of the reaction. The term k in the equation is called the rate constant. it is a proportionality constant that is characteristic of the particular reaction & is significantly dependent only on temperature. ERT 108/3 PHYSICAL CHEMISTRY11 SEM 2 (2010/2011) Method of Initial Rates • This simple method of establishing the exponents in a rate equation involves measuring the initial rate of reaction for different sets of initial concentration. ERT 108/3 PHYSICAL CHEMISTRY12 SEM 2 (2010/2011) Example 3 • The data of three reactions involving S2O82and I- were given in the below table. (i) Use the data to establish the order of reaction with respect to S2O82-, the order with respect to I- & the overall order. S 2O82 (aq) 3I (aq) 2SO42 (aq) I 3 aq ERT 108/3 PHYSICAL CHEMISTRY13 SEM 2 (2010/2011) Cont…Example 3 (ii) Determine the value of k for the above reaction. (iii) What is the initial rate of disappearance of S2O82- reaction in which the initial concentrations are [S2O82- ] =0.050M & [I-]=0.025M? (iv) What is the rate of formation of SO42- in Experiment 1? ERT 108/3 PHYSICAL CHEMISTRY14 SEM 2 (2010/2011) Answer (Example 3) (i) In the experiments 1 & 2, [I-] is held constant & [S2O82-] is increased by a factor of 2, from 0.038 to 0.076M. The reaction rate, R increased by a factor of 2 also. R k S 2O8 I m n R2 = k (0.076)m(0.060)n = k (2x0.038)m(0.060)n = k (2)m (0.038)m (0.060)n = 2.8 x 10-5 mol L-1 s-1 R1 = k (0.038)m(0.060)n =1.4 x 10-5 mol L-1 s-1 5 R2 k (2) 0.038 0.060 2 . 8 x 10 m 2 2 m n 5 R1 1.4 x10 k 0.038 0.060 m m n If 2m =2, then m =1. The reaction is first order in S2O82-. ERT 108/3 PHYSICAL CHEMISTRY15 SEM 2 (2010/2011) R2 = k (0.076)m(0.060)n = k (0.076)m(2x0.030)n = k (0.076)m (2)n(0.030)n = 2.8 x 10-5 mol L-1 s-1 R3 = k (0.076)m(0.030)n =1.4 x 10-5 mol L-1 s-1 5 R2 k 0.076 2 0.030 2 . 8 x 10 n 2 2 m n 5 R3 1.4 x10 k 0.076 0.030 m n n If 2n =2, then n =1. The reaction is first order in I-. The overall order of the reaction is m + n = 1+1 = 2 (second order). ERT 108/3 PHYSICAL CHEMISTRY16 SEM 2 (2010/2011) (ii) Use any one of the three experiments: R1 1.4 x105 mol L1s 1 k 2 1 1 S 2O8 I 0.038mol L x 0.060 mol L k = 6.1 x 10-3 L mol-1 s-1. (iii) Once the k value is determined, the rate law can be used to predict the rate of reaction. Reaction rate, R k S 2O8 I R = 6.1 x 10-3 L mol-1 s-1 x 0.050 mol L-1 x 0.025 mol L-1 = 7.6 x 10-6 mol L-1 s-1. TRT401 Physical Chemistry BBLee@UniMAP ERT 108/3 PHYSICAL CHEMISTRY17 SEM 2 (2010/2011) • Based on the stoichiometry, 2 moles of SO42- are produced for every mole of S2O82- consumed. 2 2 mol SO 4 No.mol SO42 ( L1s 1 ) 1.4 x105 mol S 2O82 L1s 1 x 1 molS 2O82 = 2.8 x 10-5 mol SO42-(L-1 s-1). ERT 108/3 PHYSICAL CHEMISTRY18 SEM 2 (2010/2011) Zero-order, First-order, Second-order Reactions ERT 108/3 PHYSICAL CHEMISTRY19 SEM 2 (2010/2011) Cont……… ERT 108/3 PHYSICAL CHEMISTRY20 SEM 2 (2010/2011) Zero order First order Second order Zero-order, First-order, Secondorder Reactions ERT 108/3 PHYSICAL CHEMISTRY21 SEM 2 (2010/2011) Example 4 (a) When [N2O5] =0.44M, the rate of decomposition of N2O5 is 2.6 x 10-4 mol L-1 s-1. what is the value of k for this first-order reaction? (b) N2O5 initially at a concentration of 1.0 mol/L in CCl4, is allowed to decompose at 450C. At what time will [N2O5] be reduced to 0.50M? ERT 108/3 PHYSICAL CHEMISTRY22 SEM 2 (2010/2011) Answer (Example 4) (a) Rate of disappearance of N2O5 (R) = k [N2O5] R 2.6 x104 mol L1s 1 = 5.9 x 10-4 s-1 k N 2O5 0.44 mol / L (b) For 1st order of reaction, to determine t, we can use: ln[ A] kt ln A0 k log[ A]t t log A0 2.303 log [A]0 = log [N2O5]0 = log 1.0 = 0. 5.9 x104 s 1 t 0 log [A]t = log [N2O5]t = log 0.50 = -0.30. 0.30 2.303 use, k = 5.9 x 10-4 s-1. 2.303 x0.30 3 t 1 . 1 x 10 s 4 1 5.9 x10 s ERT 108/3 PHYSICAL CHEMISTRY23 SEM 2 (2010/2011) Example 5 Time, min [A], M log [A] 1/[A] 0 1.00 0.00 1.00 5 0.63 -0.20 1.59 10 0.46 -0.34 2.17 15 0.36 -0.44 2.78 25 0.25 -0.60 4.00 • The data of the above table were obtained for the decomposition reaction: A → 2B + C. (a) Establish the order of the reaction. (b) What is the rate constant, k? ERT 108/3 PHYSICAL CHEMISTRY24 SEM 2 (2010/2011) Answer (Example 5) (a) Plot graph based on the data given in the Table. Not Straight line – Not Zero Not Straight line – Not First order order Straight line – 2nd order (b) The slope of the 3rd graph: 4.00 1.00L / mol k 0.12 L mol 1 min 1 25 min ERT 108/3 PHYSICAL CHEMISTRY25 SEM 2 (2010/2011) Reaction rates: Effect of temperature • Chemical reactions tend to go faster at higher temperature. slow down some reactions by lowering the temperature. • Increasing the temperature increases the fraction of the molecules that have energies in excess of the activation energy. this factor is so important that for many chemical reactions it can lead to a doubling or tripling of the reaction rate for a temperature increase of only 100C. ERT 108/3 PHYSICAL CHEMISTRY26 SEM 2 (2010/2011) Cont…. • In 1889, Arrhenius noted that the k data for many reactions fit the equation: k Ae Ea RT where, A & Ea are constants characteristics of the reaction R = the gas constant. Ea = the Arrhenius activation energy (kJ/mol or kcal/mol) A = the pre-exponential factor (Arrhenius factor). ( the unit of A is the same as those of k.) • Taking log of the above equation: Ea Ea log 10 A ln k ln A log 10 k 2.303RT RT ERT 108/3 PHYSICAL CHEMISTRY27 SEM 2 (2010/2011) Cont…. • If the Arrhenius equation is obeyed: a plot of log10 k versus 1/T is a straight line with slope: -Ea/2.303 R and intercept log10 A. This enables Ea and A to be found. • Another useful equation: log k2 k1 Ea T2 T1 2.303R T2T1 (eliminate the constant A). T2 and T1 - two kelvin temperatures. k2 and k1 - the rate constants at these temperatures. Ea – the activation energy (J/mol) R – the gas constant (8.314 Jmol-1 K-1). ERT 108/3 PHYSICAL CHEMISTRY28 SEM 2 (2010/2011) Example 6 (a) Use the figure given to find A and Ea for: 2 N 2O5 4 NO2 O2 (b) Calculate Ea for a reaction where rate constant at room temperature is doubled by a 10Kelvin increase in T. Figure: Rate constant versus temperature for the gas-phase first order decomposition reaction ERT 108/3 PHYSICAL CHEMISTRY29 SEM 2 (2010/2011) Answer (Example 6a) • Tabulate the data as follows. Temp, 0C Temp, K 1/Temp, 1/K k, s-1 log10 k 25 298 0.0034 0.001 -3 • Construct the Arrhenius plot of log10k versus 1/T for the reaction. Intercept (log10A)=13.5 A = 3x1013s-1 Slope=-5500K, Ea 5500 2.303R Ea=25kcal/mol =105 kJ/mol Figure: Arrhenius plot of log10 k versus 1/T for this reaction. Note: the long extrapolation needed to find A. ERT 108/3 PHYSICAL CHEMISTRY30 SEM 2 (2010/2011) Answer (Example 6b) • Based on the given info: k2 = 2k1 , T1 = room temperature (298K), T2=298+10 = 308K, • The Arrhenius equation: log • Substitute: log 2 k1 k1 k2 k1 Ea T2 T1 2.303R T2T1 Ea (308) 298 2.303R 308(298) Ea = 53 kJ/mol ERT 108/3 PHYSICAL CHEMISTRY31 SEM 2 (2010/2011) Reaction Mechanisms • Each molecular event that significantly alters a molecule’s energy or geometry is called an elementary process (reaction). • The mechanism of a reaction: the sequence of elementary reactions that add up to give the overall reaction. A mechanism is a hypothesis about the elementary steps through which chemical change occurs. ERT 108/3 PHYSICAL CHEMISTRY32 SEM 2 (2010/2011) Reaction Mechanisms • Elementary processes in which a single molecule dissociates (unimolecular) or two molecules collide (bimolecular) much more probable than a process requiring the simultaneous collision of three bodies (termolecular). • All elementary processes are reversible and may reach a steady-state condition. In the steady state the rates of the forward & reverse processes become equal. • One elementary process may occur much more slower than all the others. In this case, it determines the rate at which the overall reaction proceeds & is called the rate-determining/ limiting step. ERT 108/3 PHYSICAL CHEMISTRY33 SEM 2 (2010/2011) The Hydrogen-Iodine Reaction H2 (g) + I2 (g) → 2HI (g) • Rate of formation of HI = k [H2][I2] • The hydrogen-iodine reaction is proposed to be a two-step mechanism [Sullivan J. (1967). J.Chem.Phys.46:73]. 1st step: iodine molecules are believed to dissociate into iodine atoms. 2nd step: simultaneous collision of two iodine atoms and a hydrogen molecule. (this termolecular step is expected to occur much more slowly – the rate-determining step). ERT 108/3 PHYSICAL CHEMISTRY34 SEM 2 (2010/2011) The Hydrogen-Iodine Reaction 1st step: 2nd step: Net: I 2 g k1 2 I ( g ) [Fast] k2 2I g H 2 ( g ) 2HI ( g ) k3 [Slow] I 2 ( g ) H 2 ( g ) 2HI g • If the reversible step reaches a steady state condition: rate of disappearance of I2 = rate of formation of I2 k1[ I 2 ] k2 [ I ] 2 I 2 k1 I 2 k2 ERT 108/3 PHYSICAL CHEMISTRY35 SEM 2 (2010/2011) The Hydrogen-Iodine Reaction • For the rate-determining step: Rate of formation of HI k3 2I g H 2 ( g ) 2HI ( g ) = k3 [I]2[H2] where k1[ I 2 ] k2 [ I ] 2 k1 k3 H 2 I 2 k2 = K[H2][I2] where (K=k1k3/k2) ERT 108/3 PHYSICAL CHEMISTRY36 SEM 2 (2010/2011) Example 7 • The thermal decomposition of ozone to oxygen: 2O3 (g) → 3O2 (g) • The observed rate law: 2 Rate of disappearance of O3 = k O3 O2 • Show that the following mechanism is consistent with this experiment rate law. 1st: k O3 2nd: 1 k2 O2 O k3 O O 3 2O 2 ERT 108/3 PHYSICAL CHEMISTRY37 SEM 2 (2010/2011) Answer (Example 7) • Assume the 1st step reaches the steady state condition: Rate of formation of O = Rate of disappearance of O k1 [O3] = k2 [O2] [O] k1 O3 O k 2 O2 • Assume the 2nd step is the rate-determining step: Rate of disappearance of O3 = k3 [O][O3] (where k = k1k3/k2) k1k3 O3 O3 O3 k O2 k 2 O2 2 ERT 108/3 PHYSICAL CHEMISTRY38 SEM 2 (2010/2011) Experimental methods for fast reactions • Many reactions are too fast to follow by the classical methods. • Several ways to study fast reactions : 1. Rapid flow methods: (i) Continuous flow (ii) Stopped flow 2. Relaxation methods: (i) Temperature jump (T-jump) method (ii) Pressure jump method (iii) Electric field jump method 3. Flash photolysis 4. Shock tube 5. Nuclear-magnetic-resonance (NMR) spectroscopy ERT 108/3 PHYSICAL CHEMISTRY39 SEM 2 (2010/2011) ASSIGNMENT 1 Write a short note for the following fast reaction: a) b) c) d) e) Rapid flow methods Relaxation methods Flash photolysis Shock tube Nuclear-magnetic-resonance (NMR) spectroscopy ERT 108/3 PHYSICAL CHEMISTRY40 SEM 2 (2010/2011) The End ERT 108/3 PHYSICAL CHEMISTRY41 SEM 2 (2010/2011)